Curated by Pauline Caplet, a selection of images (including two from my DEEP in Between series) from the body of work collected by Mark Sink with The Big Picture in Colorado will be traveling to Brussels Belgium. The 'Coup de Fourche' collection, featuring photographers from around the globe will be shown in Studio Baxton.

Two images have been selected for installation in the City Panorama bus shelters out of 1200 submitted images. 100 photographs were chosen and will be printed on 2' x 8' wooden panels and will remain installed in King County Metro shelters for up to 10 years.This citywide exhibition brings photographic art into everyday life.

Paula Tognarelli curates The Visual Metric for the Griffin Museum of Photography in Winchester, MA and has included the following photograph, The Childhood Gravity Games - Red from the series The Childhood Gravity Games.

August 4 – November 7, 2017

"Anyone from a manufacturing background has a propensity for visual depictions of measurement, process and outcome. Whether it be an excel graph for tracking a trend, a work flow diagram following a widget through production or a fish bone chart to problem solve, it is easier to analyze with a pictorial rendering than a spread sheet of raw numbers or a written description of a procedure. This is the thread of the idea leading to “The Visual Metric” exhibition for the Griffin Museum of Photography...

Excited to participate in this street art project, The Big Picture Colorado, organized and curated by Mark Sink. Walking the streets filled with black and white photography must be inspiring and energizing.

This show of grand scale contemporary photography exposes the possibility of images as art via email instantly exchanged globally and blown up to large mural proportions. Images gathered from photographers around the world will be expanded as large Xerox prints and displayed inside galleries as well as posted in approved outdoor locations throughout the city of Denver and sister cities around the globe. - Mark Sink

One of the photographers I've long admired is Joyce Tenneson. Her dreamy, gorgeous style of working with women is something that has inspired me from the beginning of my photography career. When I saw she was curating a show for the PhotoPlace Gallery in Vermont, entitled 'Intimate Portraits' I knew I had to apply. I was beyond thrilled to know she had not only looked at my work but selected it for gallery exhibition. The group of intimate portraits she selected are wonderfully complex, dreamy and thought-provoking.